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1.
Cells in tendon deposit parallel arrays of collagen fibrils to form a functional tissue, but how this is achieved is unknown. The cellular mechanism is thought to involve the formation of intracellular collagen fibrils within Golgi to plasma membrane carriers. This is facilitated by the intracellular processing of procollagen to collagen by members of the tolloid and ADAMTS families of enzymes. The carriers subsequently connect to the extracellular matrix via finger-like projections of the plasma membrane, known as fibripositors. In this study we have shown, using three-dimensional electron microscopy, the alignment of fibripositors with intracellular fibrils as well as an orientated cable of actin filaments lining the cytosolic face of a fibripositor. To demonstrate a specific role for the cytoskeleton in coordinating extracellular matrix assembly, cytochalasin was used to disassemble actin filaments and nocodazole or colchicine were used to disrupt microtubules. Microtubule disruption delayed procollagen transport through the secretory pathway, but fibripositor numbers were unaffected. Actin filament disassembly resulted in rapid loss of fibripositors and a subsequent disappearance of intracellular fibrils. Procollagen secretion or processing was not affected by cytochalasin treatment, but the parallelism of extracellular collagen fibrils was altered. In this case a significant proportion of collagen fibrils were found to no longer be orientated with the long axis of the tendon. The results suggest an important role for the actin cytoskeleton in the alignment and organization of the collagenous extracellular matrix in embryonic tendon.  相似文献   

2.
It is established fact that type I collagen spontaneously self-assembles in vitro in the absence of cells or other macromolecules. Whether or not this is the situation in vivo was unknown. Recent evidence shows that intracellular cleavage of procollagen (the soluble precursor of collagen) to collagen can occur in embryonic tendon cells in vivo, and when this occurs, intracellular collagen fibrils are observed. A cause-and-effect relationship between intracellular collagen and intracellular fibrils was not established. Here we show that intracellular cleavage of procollagen to collagen occurs in postnatal murine tendon cells in situ. Pulse-chase analyses showed cleavage of procollagen to collagen via its two propeptide-retained intermediates. Furthermore, immunoelectron microscopy, using an antibody that recognizes the triple helical domain of collagen, shows collagen molecules in large-diameter transport compartments close to the plasma membrane. However, neither intracellular fibrils nor fibripositors (collagen fibril-containing plasma membrane protrusions) were observed. The results show that intracellular collagen occurs in murine tendon in the absence of intracellular fibrillogenesis and fibripositor formation. Furthermore, the results show that murine postnatal tendon cells have a high capacity to prevent intracellular collagen fibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
The ability of tendon to transmit forces from muscle to bone is directly attributable to an extracellular matrix (ECM) containing parallel bundles of collagen fibrils. Although the biosynthesis of collagen is well characterized, how cells deposit the fibrils in regular parallel arrays is not understood. Here we show that cells in the tendon mesenchyme are nearly cylindrical and are aligned side by side and end to end along the proximal-distal axis of the limb. Using three-dimensional reconstruction electron microscopy, we show that the cells have deep channels in their plasma membranes and contain bundles of parallel fibrils that are contiguous from one cell to another along the tendon axis. A combination of electron microscopy, microarray analysis, and immunofluorescence suggested that the cells are held together by cadherin-11-containing cell-cell junctions. Using a combination of RNA interference and electron microscopy, we showed that knockdown of cadherin-11 resulted in cell separation, loss of plasma membrane channels, and misalignment of the collagen fibrils in the ECM. Our results show that tendon formation in the developing limb requires precise regulation of cell shape via cadherin-11-mediated cell-cell junctions and coaxial alignment of plasma membrane channels in longitudinally stacked cells.  相似文献   

4.
Embryonic tendon cells (ETCs) have actin-rich fibripositors that accompany parallel bundles of collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix. To study fibripositor function, we have developed a three-dimensional cell culture system that promotes and maintains fibripositors. We show that ETCs cultured in fixed-length fibrin gels replace the fibrin during ~6 days in culture with parallel bundles of narrow-diameter collagen fibrils that are uniaxially aligned with fibripositors, thereby generating a tendon-like construct. Fibripositors occurred simultaneously with onset of parallel collagen fibrils. Interestingly, the constructs have a tendon-like crimp. In initial experiments to study the effects of tension, we showed that cutting the constructs resulted in loss of tension, loss of fibripositors and the appearance of immature fibrils with no preferred orientation.  相似文献   

5.
The development and evolution of multicellular animals relies on the ability of certain cell types to synthesise an extracellular matrix (ECM) comprising very long collagen fibrils that are arranged in very ordered 3-dimensional scaffolds. Tendon is a good example of a highly ordered ECM, in which tens of millions of collagen fibrils, each hundreds of microns long, are synthesised parallel to the tendon long axis. This review highlights recent discoveries showing that the assembly of collagen fibrils in tendon is hierarchical, and involves the formation of fairly short "collagen early fibrils" that are the fusion precursors of the very long fibrils that occur in mature tendon.  相似文献   

6.
The physical structure of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is tissue-specific and fundamental to normal tissue function. Proper alignment of ECM fibers is essential for the functioning of a variety of tissues. While matrix assembly in general has been intensively investigated, little is known about the mechanisms required for formation of aligned ECM fibrils. We investigated the initiation of fibronectin (FN) matrix assembly using fibroblasts that assemble parallel ECM fibrils and found that matrix assembly sites, where FN fibrillogenesis is initiated, were oriented in parallel at the cell poles. We show that these polarized matrix assembly sites progress into fibrillar adhesions and ultimately into aligned FN fibrils. Cells that assemble an unaligned meshwork matrix form matrix assembly sites around the cell periphery, but the distribution of matrix assembly sites in these cells could be modulated through micropatterning or mechanical stretch. While an elongated cell shape corresponds with a polarized matrix assembly site distribution, these two features are not absolutely linked, since we discovered that transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β1) enhances matrix assembly site polarity and assembly of aligned fibrils independent of cell elongation. We conclude that the ultimate orientation of FN fibrils is determined by the alignment and distribution of matrix assembly sites that form during the initial stages of cell–FN interactions.  相似文献   

7.
In the tendon, the development of mature mechanical properties is dependent on the assembly of a tendon-specific extracellular matrix. This matrix is synthesized by the tendon fibroblasts and composed of collagen fibrils organized as fibers, as well as fibril-associated collagenous and non-collagenous proteins. All of these components are integrated, during development and growth, to form a functional tissue. During tendon development, collagen fibrillogenesis and matrix assembly progress through multiple steps where each step is regulated independently, culminating in a structurally and functionally mature tissue. Collagen fibrillogenesis occurs in a series of extracellular compartments where fibril intermediates are assembled and mature fibrils grow through a process of post-depositional fusion of the intermediates. Linear and lateral fibril growth occurs after the immature fibril intermediates are incorporated into fibers. The processes are regulated by interactions of extracellular macromolecules with the fibrils. Interactions with quantitatively minor fibrillar collagens, fibril-associated collagens and proteoglycans influence different steps in fibrillogenesis and the extracellular microdomains provide a mechanism for the tendon fibroblasts to regulate these extracellular interactions.  相似文献   

8.
Collagens are triple helical proteins that occur in the extracellular matrix (ECM) and at the cell-ECM interface. There are more than 30 collagens and collagen-related proteins but the most abundant are collagens I and II that exist as D-periodic (where D=67nm) fibrils. The fibrils are of broad biomedical importance and have central roles in embryogenesis, arthritis, tissue repair, fibrosis, tumor invasion, and cardiovascular disease. Collagens I and II spontaneously form fibrils in vitro, which shows that collagen fibrillogenesis is a selfassembly process. However, the situation in vivo is not that simple; collagen I-containing fibrils do not form in the absence of fibronectin, fibronectin-binding and collagen-binding integrins, and collagen V. Likewise, the thin collagen II-containing fibrils in cartilage do not form in the absence of collagen XI. Thus, in vivo, cellular mechanisms are in place to control what is otherwise a protein self-assembly process. This review puts forward a working hypothesis for how fibronectin and integrins (the organizers) determine the site of fibril assembly, and collagens V and XI (the nucleators) initiate collagen fibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
The hierarchy of extracytoplasmic compartmentalization and fibrillar organization as well as the assembly and deposition of collagen fibrils was characterized in the 15-day chick embryo dermis using transmission electron microscopy. At least two levels of extracellular compartmentalization are recognizable at this stage of dermal development. The first compartment consists of a series of narrow channels containing single or small groups (less than 5) of collagen fibrils. These channels course deep within the cell and are open to the extracellular space. The second extracellular compartment consists of fibrils grouped as small bundles in close association with the cell surface and is most often defined by a single fibroblast. A third level of fibril organization and compartmentalization is sometimes apparent at this stage of dermal development consisting of laterally associated bundles, more characteristic of the mature dermis. This compartment is associated with the fibroblast surface, but is less well defined than the fibril channels or bundle-forming compartments. Dermal collagen fibrils within bundles are discontinuous. Numerous fibrils ends are identified from serial sections and the ends gradually taper. These data indicate that the dermal fibroblast compartmentalizes the extracellular space and deposits collagen fibril segments during dermal morphogenesis. A model for the genesis of the extracellular compartments and their role in collagen fibrillogenesis and development of regularly arranged connective tissues, tendon, and cornea has been proposed. Dermal development conforms to this model and we suggest that extracytoplasmic compartmentalization of the steps in matrix assembly and segmental deposition of collagen fibrils are important mechanisms in the development of a wide variety of connective tissues.  相似文献   

10.
The formation of collagen fibrils, fibril bundles, and tissue-specific collagen macroaggregates by chick embryo tendon fibroblasts was studied using conventional and high voltage electron microscopy. During chick tendon morphogenesis, there are at least three extracellular compartments responsible for three levels of matrix organization: collagen fibrils, bundles, and collagen macroaggregates. Our observations indicate that the initial extracellular events in collagen fibrillogenesis occur within narrow cytoplasmic recesses, presumably under close cellular regulation. Collagen fibrils are formed within these deep, narrow recesses, which are continuous with the extracellular space. Where these narrow recesses fuse with the cell surface, it becomes highly convoluted with folds and processes that envelope forming fibril bundles. The bundles laterally associate and coalesce, forming aggregates within a third cell-defined extracellular compartment. Our interpretation is that this third compartment forms as cell processes retract and cytoplasm is withdrawn between bundles. These studies define a hierarchical organization within the tendon, extending from fibril assembly to fascicle formation. Correlation of different levels of extracellular compartmentalization with tissue architecture provides insight into the cellular controls involved in collagen fibril and higher order assembly and a better understanding of how collagen fibrils are collected into structural groups, positioned, and woven into functional tissue-specific collagen macroaggregates.  相似文献   

11.
In the field of biomechanics, collagen fibrils are believed to be robust mechanical structures characterized by a low extensibility. Until very recently, information on the mechanical properties of collagen fibrils could only be derived from ensemble measurements performed on complete tissues such as bone, skin, and tendon. Here, we measure force-elongation/relaxation profiles of single collagen fibrils using atomic force microscopy (AFM)-based force spectroscopy (FS). The elongation profiles show that in vitro-assembled human type I collagen fibrils are characterized by a large extensibility. Numerous discontinuities and a plateau in the force profile indicate major reorganization occurring within the fibrils in the 1.5- to 4.5-nN range. Our study demonstrates that newly assembled collagen fibrils are robust structures with a significant reserve of elasticity that could play a determinant role in the extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling associated with tissue growth and morphogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
In mice, embryo implantation induces profound changes in the endometrium. These changes include redifferentiation of endometrial fibroblasts and extensive remodeling of extracellular matrix components. We have previously shown that, during this process, there is an impressive increase in the thickness of collagen fibrils present in decidualised areas that surround the implantation site, while collagen fibrils in non-decidualised areas and in the interimplantation site remain thin. In vitro and in vivo experiments have identified small leucine rich proteoglycans (SLRPs) as regulators of collagen fibrillogenesis. In a previous study, we demonstrated a difference between the pre-implantation and the post-implantation expression and distribution of four SLRPs types in uterine tissues. The present study, utilising immunocytochemical electron microscopy, shows that biglycan is associated with the presence of thick collagen fibrils in decidualised regions of the endometrium and that decorin is associated exclusively with thin collagen fibrils in non-decidualised endometrial areas. These results strongly indicate that biglycan plays a role in collagen fibrillogenesis and probably participates in the determination of collagen fibril thickness in the mouse decidua.  相似文献   

13.
Lu P  Zhang GR  Song XH  Zou XH  Wang LL  Ouyang HW 《PloS one》2011,6(6):e21154
The presence of uniformly small collagen fibrils in tendon repair is believed to play a major role in suboptimal tendon healing. Collagen V is significantly elevated in healing tendons and plays an important role in fibrillogenesis. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of a particular chain of collagen V on the fibrillogenesis of Sprague-Dawley rat tenocytes, as well as the efficacy of Col V siRNA engineered tenocytes for tendon tissue engineering. RNA interference gene therapy and a scaffold free tissue engineered tendon model were employed. The results showed that scaffold free tissue engineered tendon had tissue-specific tendon structure. Down regulation of collagen V α1 or α2 chains by siRNAs (Col5α1 siRNA, Col5α2 siRNA) had different effects on collagen I and decorin gene expressions. Col5α1 siRNA treated tenocytes had smaller collagen fibrils with abnormal morphology; while those Col5α2 siRNA treated tenocytes had the same morphology as normal tenocytes. Furthermore, it was found that tendons formed by coculture of Col5α1 siRNA treated tenocytes with normal tenocytes at a proper ratio had larger collagen fibrils and relative normal contour. Conclusively, it was demonstrated that Col V siRNA engineered tenocytes improved tendon tissue regeneration. And an optimal level of collagen V is vital in regulating collagen fibrillogenesis. This may provide a basis for future development of novel cellular- and molecular biology-based therapeutics for tendon diseases.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this study was to correlate ultrastructural features of tendon collagen fibrils at various stages of development with the presence of procollagen, pN-collagen, pC-collagen, and the free amino propeptides and carboxyl propeptide of type I procollagen. Tendons from 10-, 14-, and 18-day chicken embryos reveal small, well-defined intercellular compartments containing collagen fibrils with diameters showing a unimodal distribution. At 21 days (hatching) and 9 days (post hatching) and at 5 weeks (post hatching), the compartments are larger, less well-defined, and there is multimodal distribution of tendon fibril diameters. Procollagen and the intermediates pN-collagen and pC-collagen are present in tendons up to 18 days. Thereafter there is a marked reduction in procollagen, whereas the intermediates persist throughout all stages of development. Similarly, free amino propeptides and carboxyl propeptides of type I procollagen were found at all stages. The amino propeptide of type III procollagen was restricted to the peritendineum until 7 weeks post hatching. At that time, a network of fibrils containing the amino propeptide of type III procollagen was seen delineating well-circumscribed compartments of collagen fibrils throughout the entire tendon. This study supports the notion that pN- and pC-collagen have an extracellular role and participate in collagen fibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
Collagen fibres from rat tail tendon suspended in small pieces in a solution (pH 7.8) containing 0.5 M CaCl2 were treated with purified bovine trypsin at 20 degrees C for 20 h. After the enzyme treatment collagen from this solution was precipitated out and reconstituted in vitro into native-type fibrils. The banding pattern in these reconstituted fibrils was found to be oblique. This is comparable to that observed recently in fibrils reconstituted from cartilage collagen. On the other hand, normal transverse banding pattern was observed in the fibrils reconstituted in vitro from collagen solution of rat tail tendon which was not pre-treated with trypsin. No significant change was, however, observed in the segment long spacing fibrils precipitated from the enzyme-treated collagen solution. It is possible that the enzyme might affect the mode of organization of tropocollagen molecules during in vitro fibrillogenesis into native-type fibrils either by interacting with the "telopeptide" regions or with the non-collagenous components associated with the native protein and this could probably result into the formation of fibrils with oblique banding pattern.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The synthesis of an extracellular matrix containing long (approximately mm in length) collagen fibrils is fundamental to the normal morphogenesis of animal tissues. In this study we have direct evidence that fibroblasts synthesise transient early fibril intermediates (approximately 1 micrometer in length) that interact by tip-to-tip fusion to generate long fibrils seen in older tissues. Examination of early collagen fibrils from tendon showed that two types of early fibrils occur: unipolar fibrils (with carboxyl (C) and amino (N) ends) and bipolar fibrils (with two N-ends). End-to-end fusion requires the C-end of a unipolar fibril. Proteoglycans coated the shafts of the fibrils but not the tips. In the absence of proteoglycans the fibrils aggregated by side-to-side interactions. Therefore, proteoglycans promote tip-to-tip fusion and inhibit side-to-side fusion. This distribution of proteoglycan along the fibril required co-assembly of collagen and proteoglycan prior to fibril assembly. The study showed that collagen fibrillogenesis is a hierarchical process that depends on the unique structure of unipolar fibrils and a novel function of proteoglycans.  相似文献   

18.
Tissue development in multicellular animals relies on the ability of cells to synthesise an extracellular matrix (ECM) containing spatially-organised fibrous assemblies, the most widespread of which is based on collagen fibrils whose length greatly exceeds that of individual cells. The importance of the correct regulation of fibril deposition is exemplified in diseases such as osteogenesis imperfecta (caused by mutations in collagen genes), fibrosis (caused by ectopic accumulation of collagen) and cardiovascular disease (which involves cells and macromolecules binding to collagen in the vessel wall). Much is known about the molecular biology of collagens but less is known about collagen fibril structure and how the fibrils are formed (fibrillogenesis). This is explained in part by the fact that the fibrils are non-crystalline, extensively cross-linked, and very large, which makes them refractory to study by conventional biochemical and high-resolution structure-determination techniques. Electron microscopy has become established as the method of choice for studying collagen fibril structure and assembly, and this article describes the electron microscope methods most often used.  相似文献   

19.
The structure and organisation of the extracellular matrix, and in particular the axial alignment of type I collagen fibrils, are essential for the tensile strength of tendons. The resident tenocytes synthesize and maintain the composition of the extracellular matrix, which changes with age and maturation. Other components of the extracellular matrix include less abundant collagen types II, III, V, VI, XII, proteoglycans and glycoproteins. Cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) is an abundant non-collagenous pentameric glycoprotein in the tendon, which can bind to collagen types I and II. The function of COMP in the tendon is not clear, but it may act as a catalyst in fibrillogenesis. Its concentration changes with age, maturation and load. The present study delineates the ultrastructural distribution of COMP and its correlation to collagen fibril thickness in different compartments in two flexor tendons from horses of different ages (foetus, 8 months, 3 years, 12 years). The immunolabeling for COMP was higher in the superficial digital flexor tendon compared with the deep digital flexor tendon and it increased with the age of the animal, with the highest concentration in the 3-year-olds. Fibril diameter differed between age groups and a more homogenous fibril population was found in the fetal tendons. A positive correlation between high COMP immunolabeling and the percentage of small fibrils (<60 nm) were present in the SDFT. COMP immunolabeling was enriched at the gap region of the collagen fibril. In situ hybridization revealed the strongest expression in tendons from the 3-year-old horses whereas there was no expression in foetal tendon.  相似文献   

20.
Fibromodulin is a member of a family of connective tissue glycoproteins/proteoglycans containing leucine-rich repeat motifs. Several members of this gene family bind to fibrillar collagens and are believed to function in the assembly of the collagen network in connective tissues. Here we show that mice lacking a functional fibromodulin gene exhibit an altered morphological phenotype in tail tendon with fewer and abnormal collagen fiber bundles. In fibromodulin-null animals virtually all collagen fiber bundles are disorganized and have an abnormal morphology. Also 10-20% of the bundles in heterozygous mice are similar to the abnormal bundles in fibromodulin-null tail tendon. Ultrastructural analysis of Achilles tendon from fibromodulin-null mice show collagen fibrils with irregular and rough outlines in cross-section. Morphometric analysis show that fibromodulin-null mice have on the average thinner fibrils than wild type animals as a result of a larger preponderance of very thin fibrils in an overall similar range of fibril diameters. Protein and RNA analyses show an approximately 4-fold increase in the content of lumican in fibromodulin-null as compared with wild type tail tendon, despite a decrease in lumican mRNA. These results demonstrate a role for fibromodulin in collagen fibrillogenesis and suggest that the orchestrated action of several leucine-rich repeat glycoproteins/proteoglycans influence the architecture of collagen matrices.  相似文献   

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